different between ayn vs aya
ayn
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /a?n/
Etymology 1
A romanization of the sixteenth letter of the Semitic abjads, including Hebrew ? (?ayin), Phoenician (?ayin), Aramaic (??), and Syriac ? (??), Arabic ? (?ayn) (where it is sixteenth in abjadi order only).
Noun
ayn (plural ayns)
- (linguistics) Synonym of ayin, the various letters representing the consonant /?/ in Semitic languages.
Etymology 2
A romanization of Kazakh ??? (aïn), the Kazakh name for the letter ? (?).
Noun
ayn (plural ayns)
- (linguistics) Synonym of ghayn, the letter ?, representing the consonant /?/ or /?/, particularly in Kazakh.
Anagrams
- NAY, NYA, Nay, Yan, any, any%, nay, yan
Italian
Noun
ayn m or f (invariable)
- Alternative spelling of ain
Manx
Pronoun
ayn
- third-person singular of ayns
- in him/it
- Cha nel ayn agh craueyn. He is reduced to a skeleton.
Derived terms
- aynsyn (emphatic)
Adverb
ayn
- there
- ayn as ass, there and back
Adjective
ayn
- existent
- ayn rish foddey, long-standing
- present
ayn From the web:
- what aynen means
- what is ayn rand's philosophy
- what is aynsley china worth
- what did ayn rand believe in
- what is ayn rand known for
- what does ayn mean
- what is ayn rand
- what does ayn rand believe
aya
English
Etymology 1
Noun
aya (plural ayas)
- Alternative form of ayah
Etymology 2
Adverb
aya (not comparable)
- (archaic, dialect, New England) Yes; yea; aye.
- 1938, Thornton Wilder, Our Town: A Play in Three Acts, Coward-McCann and Samuel French (1965), ?ISBN:
- “The date is May 7, 1901, just before dawn. (COCK CROW offstage.) Aya, just about.”
- 2001, David McCullough, John Adams, Simon & Schuster (2001), ?ISBN:
- “And for all her reading, her remarkable knowledge of English poetry and literature, she was never to lose certain countrified Yankee patterns of speech, saying 'Canady' for Canada, as an example, using 'set' for sit, or the old New England 'aya,' for yes.”
- 1938, Thornton Wilder, Our Town: A Play in Three Acts, Coward-McCann and Samuel French (1965), ?ISBN:
Anagrams
- yaa
Azerbaijani
Etymology
From Common Turkic *?ja.
Noun
aya (definite accusative ayan?, plural ayalar)
- palm of the hand
- Synonyms: ovuc, k?f?
Declension
Further reading
- “aya” in Obastan.com.
Biak
Pronoun
aya
- first person singular pronoun, I
Chickasaw
Verb
aya (active/stative, in/transitive, irregular short verb)
- (intransitive) to go
- (transitive) to go (somewhere)
- (intransistive) to go to the bathroom, defecate
- (intransitive) to walk (in baseball)
Usage notes
- Replaced by iyya with Class I subject prefixes (aya used with Class I subject suffix -li).
- Replaced by ayya with Class III or N prefixes.
Inflection
Eastern Huasteca Nahuatl
Adverb
aya
- not yet
Ewe
Noun
aya
- wind
Japanese
Romanization
aya
- R?maji transcription of ??
Jumaytepeque
Noun
aya
- woman, female
References
- Chris Rogers, The Use and Development of the Xinkan Languages
Kurudu
Pronoun
aya
- first person singular pronoun, I
Malay
Pronunciation
- (Johor-Selangor) IPA(key): /aj?/
- (Riau-Lingga) IPA(key): /aj?/
- Rhymes: -aj?, -j?, -?
- Rhymes: -?
Noun
aya (Jawi spelling ????, plural aya-aya, informal 1st possessive ayaku, impolite 2nd possessive ayamu, 3rd possessive ayanya)
- father (male parent)
Synonyms
- ayah (ayahanda, yah)
- abah (aba, bah)
- bapa (bapanda, bapai, bapak, bapang, baba, papa)
- rama
Further reading
- “aya” in Pusat Rujukan Persuratan Melayu | Malay Literary Reference Centre, Kuala Lumpur: Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka, 2017.
Maybrat
Noun
aya
- water
References
- A Grammar of Maybrat: A Language of the Bird's Head Peninsula, Papua Province, Indonesia (2007)
Nanai
Adjective
aya (transliteration needed)
- good
References
- J.A. de la Fuente, Venjukov’s 1862/1868 Nanai Materials, 2011.
Papiamentu
Etymology
From Spanish allá and Portuguese alá.
Adverb
aya
- there
Quechua
Noun
aya
- soul, spirit, ghost
- corpse, deceased, dead person
Declension
Synonyms
- nuna
Derived terms
- ayapampa
- ayawaska
- Ayamarq'ay killa
Spanish
Pronunciation
Noun
aya f (plural ayas)
- female equivalent of ayo
Turkish
Etymology 1
From Ottoman Turkish ????, from Proto-Turkic *h?ya, *?ja (“palm (of hand)”). Cognate with Old Turkic [Term?].
Noun
aya (definite accusative ayay?, plural ayalar)
- palm (of hand)
Declension
References
- Ni?anyan, Sevan (2002–) , “aya”, in Ni?anyan Sözlük
Etymology 2
Noun
aya
- dative singular of ay
Yale
Noun
aya
- father
Yoruba
Noun
aya
- wife
- Synonym: abilek?
- Antonym: ?k?
References
Yupiltepeque
Etymology
Cognate to Jumaytepeque aya, Jutiapa aiya, Chiquimulilla a?y?j, Sinacantán ayala.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /aja/
Noun
aya
- woman
See also
- jumu (“man”)
References
- Vocabularios de la lengua xinca de Sinacantan (1868, D. Juan Gavarrete)
- Chris Rogers, The Use and Development of the Xinkan Languages
Zazaki
Pronoun
aya
- she
aya From the web:
- what aya is ayat al kursi
- what ayahuasca does to the brain
- what ayahuasca taught me
- what aya means
- what ayah means
- what ayahuasca taught me about covid
- what ayat is ayatul kursi in the quran
- what ayanamsa to use